ITALIAN ANCESTRY:

Hershey Archives

Early meeting of the Italian Lodge Board, circa unknown

The Hershey Community Archives operated by the M. S. Hershey Foundation holds a considerable share of photographs and other materials on the early history of Hershey and Derry Township and the Italians who immigrated to this area.

Among the most treasured are the oral histories taken over the years by archives volunteers.

Click here for the search results for the online resources of oral histories of those from the portion of Derry Township know as "Little Italy."

The Derry Township Historical Society also has a library of resources for ancestry. Call them at (717) 534-0748

Thirteen things you can do to start tracing your Italian ancestry

2. Talk to all your relatives and be persistent. They may know some detail that they think is insignificant but which turns out to be a key! Maybe they know other people who can help, too.

3. Draw your family tree, going as far back as you can, so that you know where the gaps in information are.

Italian men from Derry Township working in the local quarries.

4. Find out which comune [administrative area] your family came from. You need to know where they were born. You can then contact the Ufficio Anagrafe of that town for help. If your ancestors left Italy after 1880 you may be able to obtain a “certificate di stato di famiglia” with extensive family information.

6. Try to find out the maiden names of the women in your family so that you can trace the family further back.

7. Parish records are a wonderful source of information. You can write to parishes for help, enclosing a small donation if possible.

8. Try to connect with other people who are looking for their roots in the same town or area. You can do this via social networking sites or via http://www.ancestry.it/

9. Contact the FamilySearch website [run by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints]. If you are in the USA, you can find out where your nearest Family History Center is and you can use its resources.

10. Census information can also help you [see websites below].

11. You can search the Ellis Island records free.

12. Join ancestry.it and create a personal profile. You’ll be able to connect with others doing research on the same area and you may even hear from some of your Italian relatives!

13. We had to add this one. What is the most important thing you can do to ensure you get the most from some of the services on offer, write correctly to authorities in Italy and understand the documents you discover? Yes….. learn Italian!

The Italian State Archive. This is where to find censuses, military records and other civil records. You can write to local repositories to request copies. There is usually a charge. You cannot view documents under 75 years old.